Promoting racial harmony

Bibliographic Information

Promoting racial harmony

Michael Banton

Cambridge University Press, 1985

  • pbk.

Search this Book/Journal
Note

Bibliography: p. 132-133

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The years 1965-8 were the 'liberal hour' for race relations policy in Britain. Laws were then enacted, enforcement agencies created, and community relations councils established. These bodies, and their personnel, have been called 'the race relations industry'. To many people, the output of this 'industry' appears disappointing relative to the input into it. This book examines a variety of optimistic assumptions about the speed with which immigrants adjust to a new environment; inadequate minority bargaining power; insufficiently speedy and decisive action by the central government; unwillingness on the part of the white majority to accept the desirability of such action; and the difficulty of fitting a race relations policy into an administrative system created to serve an ethnically homogeneous population. The policies initiated in 1965 reflected the ascendancy of liberal over conservative assumptions about race relations. Now these are under sharp attack from a radical standpoint. Promoting Racial Harmony shows how the debate has changed, drawing upon recent economic theory to formulate the issues in an original but non-technical manner.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. The constraints of nature
  • 2. The realm of action
  • 3. The end of empire
  • 4. Ethnic mobilization
  • 5. The public good
  • 6. Community relations councils
  • 7. Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details
Page Top